BSS
  13 Sep 2022, 11:40

NASA's Moon mission pushed back, again

WASHINGTON, Sept 13, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - NASA is now targeting September 27 as
the earliest possible launch date for its uncrewed Artemis 1 mission to the
Moon, the agency said in a blog post Monday.

The date would depend on engineering teams successfully carrying out a test
to fuel up the Space Launch System rocket, and receive a waiver to avoid
retesting batteries on an emergency flight system that is used to destroy the
rocket if it strays from its designated range.

If it does not receive the waiver, the rocket will have to be wheeled back to
its assembly building, pushing the timeline back several weeks.

For the September 27 date, a "70-minute launch window opens at 11:37 am EDT,"
while the mission would end with an ocean splashdown of the Orion capsule on
November 5.

A potential next date comes on October 2.

The Artemis 1 space mission hopes to test the SLS as well as the unmanned
Orion capsule that sits atop it, in preparation for future Moon-bound
journeys with humans aboard.

Once launched, it will take several days for the spacecraft to reach the
Moon, flying around 60 miles (100 kilometers) at its closest approach.

One of the trip's main objectives is to test the capsule's heat shield --
which at 16 feet (five meters) in diameter is the largest ever built -- when
the ship re-enters the atmosphere.

The next mission, Artemis 2, will take astronauts to the Moon without landing
on its surface, while the third -- set for the mid-2020s -- would see the
first woman and person of color on lunar soil.

NASA wants to build a lunar space station called Gateway and keep a sustained
presence on the Moon to gain insight into how to survive very long space
missions, ahead of a mission to Mars in the 2030s.